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AND THE RACE GOES ON
Dr. Mead will talk University of Southern California
on sex patterns DAILY® TROJAN
The big beat of ASSC election- gets set for its hopefuls — Ralph Lippman (left), Gary Rafferty show their style. Three men, along with candidates to students at 1:15 today in Bovard Auditorium, final weekend swing today as the three presidential (in suit with voter in center) and Bill Mauk — for vice-president of university affairs, will speak Meanwhile, classes continue their slow rhythm.
Rx ROGER SMITH
Dr. Margaret Mead, renowned lecturer. author and specialist in family life, will speak today at noon in Bov-urd on -Changing Trends in Marriage and the Family.”
The speech is billed as “A Look at American Sex Patterns.'’ and is sponsored by the Great Issues Forum.
Dr. Mead. 66. is now curator of ethnology. American Museum of Natural History in New York, and is adjunct professor of anthropology at Columbia University.
Dr. Mead's brother. Dr. Richard R. Mead, is a professor of marketing
VOL. LIX
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1968
NO. 37
Dormitory open house -Now WHA wants it too
the USC Business School.
“She has been interested in family life and marriage for over 30 years.” he told the Daily Trojan yesterday.
Dr. Mead is also scheduled to confer briefly with members of the Sociology Department after the speech. She will return to New York Friday.
Since 1925. Dr. Mead has held 29 positions and lectureships at museums and universities around the world. In addition to her positions in anthropological. educational and sociological fields, she has taken part in the Jacob Gimbel lectures on the Psychology of Sex and was director of studies in contemporary culture at the American Museum of Natural History in 1951.
Dr. Mead holds 16 honorary degrees as well as her Ph.D. from Columbia University.
She is the recipient of 13 national awards, including a I960 citation from the Merrill-Palmer Institute of Human Development and Family Life. She was named one of the outstanding
LIPPMAN STILL IN PREXY RACE
Thf import of the March 26 article on the resignation of Ralph Lippman as ASSC Independent Representative suggested that he is no longer a candidate for ASSC President. Lippman is still a candidate and will actively pursue the presidency.
Margaret Mead
women of the Twentieth Century by the Nationwide Women Editors in 1965.
Dr. Mead has also written 15 books, several of them based on her own anthropological research. She is the author of “Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies” and “Male and Female.”
In addition. Dr. Mead coauthored with Kenneth Heyman the book “Family” in 1965.
She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and was chairman of the Committee of Science and Medicine of Parents Without Partners in 1966.
Dr. Mead has also participated in 13 expeditions, six of them to the Admiralty Islands in New Guinea to study primitive tribes there.
In the course of her studies, she has had to learn seven primitive languages.
Two of her books. “Growing Up in New Guinea" and “New Lives for Old” deal with her studies of a village before and after a 25 year absence.
Much of her New Guinea research was concentrated in studying the relationship between sex and temperament in three tribes there.
Dr. Mead is currently involved in two New Guinea field projects — a study of culture systematics, 1963-1968. and cultural structure of imagery. 1965-1969.
By JAN HUJNS1JNGER
The Women's Hall Association submitted their fourth proposal for open house visitation to Dean of Students Paul Bloland yesterday.
WHA president Jane Lindenthal still thinks that regardless of the administration’s refusals, there undeniably exists a valid need and desire for the visitation proposal.
Hope for success is basted on the recent passage of a similar Men's Hall Association proposal.
“We don't believe in a double standard. After all, what is the difference between a woman going into
a man’s room and a man going into a woman's?” she said.
In a poll of women residents, 8»D percent responded positively to the question of open visitation hours. The major cog in the machinery for passing the proposal. Miss Lindenthal said, is the fear of alumni and parental pressure.
-*■»
“If the administration says no again, WHA will respond with petitions. I doubt very much that future WHA cabinets will drop this proposal,” Miss Lindenthal said, “but if we receive valid reasons for the proposal's not being passed, I am sure we
Youth revolt linked to Kennedy assassination
By CAROL FRIEDMAN
There is a direct relationship between the assassination of President Kennedy and the current youth revolution. Elliot Mintz. Free Press columnist and moderator of a KPFK telephone talk show, said at a Hille-lunch yesterday.
Mintz prefaced his commentary by admitting that he does not consider himself an expert either on the assassination of President Kennedy or on the youth revolution. The discussion was based strictly on Mintz's opinion which he based on his reading of the Warren Report and a dozen or so books on the subject.
Mintz began by giving his view of the United States as he sees it today. “There is a general and obvious dis-
BOVARD WILL ROCK
Jefferson Airplane to fly
The six individuals who have assimilated themselves under the label of Jefferson Airplane will trip into Bovard Auditorium Saturday night, and the staid hall may never be the same.
Marty Batin. Paul Kantner. Grace Slick. Jorma Kaukonen. Spencer Dryden and Jack Casady got together in late 1965 and have been flying high ever since as one Of the leading purveyors of acid-rock.
‘ When we started the group,” Kantner explained, “we started with a definite idea in mind—that of playing music that would make people smile and bounce and say things, that would make people think about what they're doing.
“The songs can be different and still say a lot that comes across on the same level. As long as thev sav something that is worth being listened to, we feel that the song is worth singing.
“The songs that come out eventually are ones that •ay good things and sound good.”
Balin, the Airplane's lead singer, began his musical eaxeer as a singer and dancer in summer stock. He began performing with a rock and roll group in 1963 before organizing the Airplane in 1965.
Kantner, an experienced guitar and five-string ban-
jo player, met Balin in a San Francisco nightclub and teamed up with him.
Grace Slick is the daughter of an investment banker and a former model. She was originally a member of The Great Society, which she had formed with her husband.
Kaukonen has a degree in sociology from Santa Clara University. The son of the United States labor attache to Sweden, Kaukonen was induced to play guitar for the Airplane by Kantner.
Dryden walked into the Matrix, a San Francisco nightclub, one day and was asked by Balin if he could play the drums. After practicing for awhile, he decided he could and joined the group.
Casady was living in Washington, D.C., when he was asked to come West by Kantner, who felt he was a good bass player.
“When Casady got here,” Kantner said, “he had a moustache and looked sort of weird, but he played good bass, so we shaved off his ‘stache and now we are six.”
The six will perform, along with the Iron Butterfly and the Headlight Light Show at 8 and 10:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the YWCA, the Ticket Office, and in front of Founders Hall for $3, $2 and $1.50.
regard for law and order in America today.
“The break-down in law and order is due to the fact that the No. 1 man ir America was murdered and the No. 1 men in law enforcement cannot find out who did it.”
“Not only can they (the CIA and FBI) not find out who did it but they he and try to blame it on Oswald,” Mintz added.
Mintz described the Warren Report as nothing more than a fairy tale, and told the Hillel gathering that there is a double conspiracy, one to kill the President and one to hide the truth from the American public.
Returning to the relationship between the President's death and the youth revolution in the United States, Mintz told the group, “They drop out because they don’t think they can change the system by working in it.”
With the death of President Kennedy, he commented, a general hopelessness and despair took over.
Mintz spoke enthusiastically about the investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison, whom he hopes will uncover the mystery surrounding the assassination.
Asked how Garrision could possibly hope to uncover evidence which the CIA and FBI were unable to find, Mintz answered that the intent in the investigations is different.
The CIA and FBI wanted to hide the facts, he said, while Garrison is trying to uncover them.
“There are a group of people who consciously and willingly decided not to tell us what happened in Dallas, Texas,” he said.
Mintz concluded by saying that the uncovery of the assassination plot will not be the deciding factor in restoring respect for law and order in the United States.
“The methods by which we find ourselves emotionally crippled were subtle,” he said. “There’ll be mind-blowing for a couple of months after Garrison finds out who killed John F. Kennedy. Afterward we’ll get on with the business of restructuring the system to find people we can trust not to lie to us.”
would accept their validity naturally.”
The text of the latest proposal reads as follows:
I. PURPOSE
“In view of the recent trend in education toward the multi-versity it is becoming increasingly vital to souple this trend with a sincere ef. fort to balance mass education with personal, meaningful, educational experiences. Therefore, our purpose in the residence halls is to establish programs and policies which are conducive to development of responsibility, educationally, culturally and socially. It is in response to the need expressed by the women residents that we resubmit the following proposal for an Open House program.
II. HOURS
“Guests may be received in the living areas of the women's residence halls on Sundays from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
III. PROCEDURE
“A. Each floor will have the option each month to exclude, by a ma-joritv vote of the house quorum, any :>r all Sunday open houses for that month.
“B. A form must be submitted to the Head Resident of the hall by the Thursday preceding the first weekend of each month stating which Sundays will be used and which excluded.
“C. Guest books will be provided in the downstairs lounges of each hall. Each hostess must meet her sruect here and he must sisrn the guest book. Upon leaving the hall each guest must check out in the guest book.
“D. The name, room number and phone number of one person per floor, preferably a house officer or a res-
ident advisor, shall be posted by the guest book on each floor of the hall. Individual house restrictions will also be listed by the guest book.
“E The Head Resident will be notified of the person on duty at any given open house period. The purpose rrf this person is to be a reliable source for any emergencies or complaints which may arise. It will also be her responsibility to check the guest book and the common upstairs areas of the hall.
“F. Doors will remain open during all hours of open house.
IV. RESPONSIBILITY
“The Women’s Halls Association accepts complete responsibility for the smooth functioning of the open house program. We will fulfill the personal, group, and University responsibilities which this program will entail. We understand that if any of the following infractions of rules or procedures may result in suspension or cancellation of the entire program at the discretion of the Dean of Students Office.
A. Having male guests in the living areas either prior to or after the designated open house hours.
“B. Rude or unseemly behavior on the part of the guest or hostess.
“C. Failure to observe residence hall regulations.
“It is the responsibility of the person on duty in each floor to prevent infractions of A above. Infractions of B and C should be reported as complaints by the individual residents to the person on duty. Failure to immediately correct inappropriate behavior within the context of the above stipulations is grounds for referral to the appropriate judicial body and/ or the Dean of Students.”
Seniors to choose six outstanding professors
The six faculty winners of the USC Associates $1,000 Awards for Excellence in Teaching will be decided this week by graduating students who return their ballots marked for the three outstanding professors of their college careers.
The awards, instituted in 1960. will be given to professors in LAS and the professional schools. Two other professors will be honored by their fellow faculty members for creative scholarship and research.
The ballots, which have been mailed to all seniors, candidates for professional degrees and students who graduated last February, must be returned to the office of Dr. Neil Warren, dean of LAS, by March 31.
Students who qualify to vote but did not receive ballots may pick them up in his office, 200 Bovard.
Bob Gaskins, a senior who worked with Bob Lutz in revising the selection process for this year's awards, said three professors will probably be chosen from LAS and three from the professional schools.
A vote for Project FASTEN, the
four-year project headed by Dr. Sims Carter since 1964, has also been suggested by many students.
Gaskins said the final selections will be made by a committee including four students and four faculty, w’ho will count the ballots and w'eigh their significance.
The final selections sometimes deviate from the exact ballot count to allow the awards to spread more evenly among the smaller schools and departments.
All faculty are eligible to receive the awards, unless they have w’on in the past five years. Recent winners in LAS include Dr. Marvin Berry, associate professor of classics; Dr. Joseph Nyomarkay, associate professor of political science: Dr. Roxie Morris, professor of physical therapy; and Dr. Joseph Boskin, associate professor of history.
LAS professors who won five years ago and are thus eligible again for the first time this year are James Durbin, associate professor of Eng* lish; Dr. Fred Krinsky, professor of political science; and Dr. Richard Stone, professor of geology.

AND THE RACE GOES ON
Dr. Mead will talk University of Southern California
on sex patterns DAILY® TROJAN
The big beat of ASSC election- gets set for its hopefuls — Ralph Lippman (left), Gary Rafferty show their style. Three men, along with candidates to students at 1:15 today in Bovard Auditorium, final weekend swing today as the three presidential (in suit with voter in center) and Bill Mauk — for vice-president of university affairs, will speak Meanwhile, classes continue their slow rhythm.
Rx ROGER SMITH
Dr. Margaret Mead, renowned lecturer. author and specialist in family life, will speak today at noon in Bov-urd on -Changing Trends in Marriage and the Family.”
The speech is billed as “A Look at American Sex Patterns.'’ and is sponsored by the Great Issues Forum.
Dr. Mead. 66. is now curator of ethnology. American Museum of Natural History in New York, and is adjunct professor of anthropology at Columbia University.
Dr. Mead's brother. Dr. Richard R. Mead, is a professor of marketing
VOL. LIX
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1968
NO. 37
Dormitory open house -Now WHA wants it too
the USC Business School.
“She has been interested in family life and marriage for over 30 years.” he told the Daily Trojan yesterday.
Dr. Mead is also scheduled to confer briefly with members of the Sociology Department after the speech. She will return to New York Friday.
Since 1925. Dr. Mead has held 29 positions and lectureships at museums and universities around the world. In addition to her positions in anthropological. educational and sociological fields, she has taken part in the Jacob Gimbel lectures on the Psychology of Sex and was director of studies in contemporary culture at the American Museum of Natural History in 1951.
Dr. Mead holds 16 honorary degrees as well as her Ph.D. from Columbia University.
She is the recipient of 13 national awards, including a I960 citation from the Merrill-Palmer Institute of Human Development and Family Life. She was named one of the outstanding
LIPPMAN STILL IN PREXY RACE
Thf import of the March 26 article on the resignation of Ralph Lippman as ASSC Independent Representative suggested that he is no longer a candidate for ASSC President. Lippman is still a candidate and will actively pursue the presidency.
Margaret Mead
women of the Twentieth Century by the Nationwide Women Editors in 1965.
Dr. Mead has also written 15 books, several of them based on her own anthropological research. She is the author of “Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies” and “Male and Female.”
In addition. Dr. Mead coauthored with Kenneth Heyman the book “Family” in 1965.
She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and was chairman of the Committee of Science and Medicine of Parents Without Partners in 1966.
Dr. Mead has also participated in 13 expeditions, six of them to the Admiralty Islands in New Guinea to study primitive tribes there.
In the course of her studies, she has had to learn seven primitive languages.
Two of her books. “Growing Up in New Guinea" and “New Lives for Old” deal with her studies of a village before and after a 25 year absence.
Much of her New Guinea research was concentrated in studying the relationship between sex and temperament in three tribes there.
Dr. Mead is currently involved in two New Guinea field projects — a study of culture systematics, 1963-1968. and cultural structure of imagery. 1965-1969.
By JAN HUJNS1JNGER
The Women's Hall Association submitted their fourth proposal for open house visitation to Dean of Students Paul Bloland yesterday.
WHA president Jane Lindenthal still thinks that regardless of the administration’s refusals, there undeniably exists a valid need and desire for the visitation proposal.
Hope for success is basted on the recent passage of a similar Men's Hall Association proposal.
“We don't believe in a double standard. After all, what is the difference between a woman going into
a man’s room and a man going into a woman's?” she said.
In a poll of women residents, 8»D percent responded positively to the question of open visitation hours. The major cog in the machinery for passing the proposal. Miss Lindenthal said, is the fear of alumni and parental pressure.
-*■»
“If the administration says no again, WHA will respond with petitions. I doubt very much that future WHA cabinets will drop this proposal,” Miss Lindenthal said, “but if we receive valid reasons for the proposal's not being passed, I am sure we
Youth revolt linked to Kennedy assassination
By CAROL FRIEDMAN
There is a direct relationship between the assassination of President Kennedy and the current youth revolution. Elliot Mintz. Free Press columnist and moderator of a KPFK telephone talk show, said at a Hille-lunch yesterday.
Mintz prefaced his commentary by admitting that he does not consider himself an expert either on the assassination of President Kennedy or on the youth revolution. The discussion was based strictly on Mintz's opinion which he based on his reading of the Warren Report and a dozen or so books on the subject.
Mintz began by giving his view of the United States as he sees it today. “There is a general and obvious dis-
BOVARD WILL ROCK
Jefferson Airplane to fly
The six individuals who have assimilated themselves under the label of Jefferson Airplane will trip into Bovard Auditorium Saturday night, and the staid hall may never be the same.
Marty Batin. Paul Kantner. Grace Slick. Jorma Kaukonen. Spencer Dryden and Jack Casady got together in late 1965 and have been flying high ever since as one Of the leading purveyors of acid-rock.
‘ When we started the group,” Kantner explained, “we started with a definite idea in mind—that of playing music that would make people smile and bounce and say things, that would make people think about what they're doing.
“The songs can be different and still say a lot that comes across on the same level. As long as thev sav something that is worth being listened to, we feel that the song is worth singing.
“The songs that come out eventually are ones that •ay good things and sound good.”
Balin, the Airplane's lead singer, began his musical eaxeer as a singer and dancer in summer stock. He began performing with a rock and roll group in 1963 before organizing the Airplane in 1965.
Kantner, an experienced guitar and five-string ban-
jo player, met Balin in a San Francisco nightclub and teamed up with him.
Grace Slick is the daughter of an investment banker and a former model. She was originally a member of The Great Society, which she had formed with her husband.
Kaukonen has a degree in sociology from Santa Clara University. The son of the United States labor attache to Sweden, Kaukonen was induced to play guitar for the Airplane by Kantner.
Dryden walked into the Matrix, a San Francisco nightclub, one day and was asked by Balin if he could play the drums. After practicing for awhile, he decided he could and joined the group.
Casady was living in Washington, D.C., when he was asked to come West by Kantner, who felt he was a good bass player.
“When Casady got here,” Kantner said, “he had a moustache and looked sort of weird, but he played good bass, so we shaved off his ‘stache and now we are six.”
The six will perform, along with the Iron Butterfly and the Headlight Light Show at 8 and 10:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the YWCA, the Ticket Office, and in front of Founders Hall for $3, $2 and $1.50.
regard for law and order in America today.
“The break-down in law and order is due to the fact that the No. 1 man ir America was murdered and the No. 1 men in law enforcement cannot find out who did it.”
“Not only can they (the CIA and FBI) not find out who did it but they he and try to blame it on Oswald,” Mintz added.
Mintz described the Warren Report as nothing more than a fairy tale, and told the Hillel gathering that there is a double conspiracy, one to kill the President and one to hide the truth from the American public.
Returning to the relationship between the President's death and the youth revolution in the United States, Mintz told the group, “They drop out because they don’t think they can change the system by working in it.”
With the death of President Kennedy, he commented, a general hopelessness and despair took over.
Mintz spoke enthusiastically about the investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison, whom he hopes will uncover the mystery surrounding the assassination.
Asked how Garrision could possibly hope to uncover evidence which the CIA and FBI were unable to find, Mintz answered that the intent in the investigations is different.
The CIA and FBI wanted to hide the facts, he said, while Garrison is trying to uncover them.
“There are a group of people who consciously and willingly decided not to tell us what happened in Dallas, Texas,” he said.
Mintz concluded by saying that the uncovery of the assassination plot will not be the deciding factor in restoring respect for law and order in the United States.
“The methods by which we find ourselves emotionally crippled were subtle,” he said. “There’ll be mind-blowing for a couple of months after Garrison finds out who killed John F. Kennedy. Afterward we’ll get on with the business of restructuring the system to find people we can trust not to lie to us.”
would accept their validity naturally.”
The text of the latest proposal reads as follows:
I. PURPOSE
“In view of the recent trend in education toward the multi-versity it is becoming increasingly vital to souple this trend with a sincere ef. fort to balance mass education with personal, meaningful, educational experiences. Therefore, our purpose in the residence halls is to establish programs and policies which are conducive to development of responsibility, educationally, culturally and socially. It is in response to the need expressed by the women residents that we resubmit the following proposal for an Open House program.
II. HOURS
“Guests may be received in the living areas of the women's residence halls on Sundays from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
III. PROCEDURE
“A. Each floor will have the option each month to exclude, by a ma-joritv vote of the house quorum, any :>r all Sunday open houses for that month.
“B. A form must be submitted to the Head Resident of the hall by the Thursday preceding the first weekend of each month stating which Sundays will be used and which excluded.
“C. Guest books will be provided in the downstairs lounges of each hall. Each hostess must meet her sruect here and he must sisrn the guest book. Upon leaving the hall each guest must check out in the guest book.
“D. The name, room number and phone number of one person per floor, preferably a house officer or a res-
ident advisor, shall be posted by the guest book on each floor of the hall. Individual house restrictions will also be listed by the guest book.
“E The Head Resident will be notified of the person on duty at any given open house period. The purpose rrf this person is to be a reliable source for any emergencies or complaints which may arise. It will also be her responsibility to check the guest book and the common upstairs areas of the hall.
“F. Doors will remain open during all hours of open house.
IV. RESPONSIBILITY
“The Women’s Halls Association accepts complete responsibility for the smooth functioning of the open house program. We will fulfill the personal, group, and University responsibilities which this program will entail. We understand that if any of the following infractions of rules or procedures may result in suspension or cancellation of the entire program at the discretion of the Dean of Students Office.
A. Having male guests in the living areas either prior to or after the designated open house hours.
“B. Rude or unseemly behavior on the part of the guest or hostess.
“C. Failure to observe residence hall regulations.
“It is the responsibility of the person on duty in each floor to prevent infractions of A above. Infractions of B and C should be reported as complaints by the individual residents to the person on duty. Failure to immediately correct inappropriate behavior within the context of the above stipulations is grounds for referral to the appropriate judicial body and/ or the Dean of Students.”
Seniors to choose six outstanding professors
The six faculty winners of the USC Associates $1,000 Awards for Excellence in Teaching will be decided this week by graduating students who return their ballots marked for the three outstanding professors of their college careers.
The awards, instituted in 1960. will be given to professors in LAS and the professional schools. Two other professors will be honored by their fellow faculty members for creative scholarship and research.
The ballots, which have been mailed to all seniors, candidates for professional degrees and students who graduated last February, must be returned to the office of Dr. Neil Warren, dean of LAS, by March 31.
Students who qualify to vote but did not receive ballots may pick them up in his office, 200 Bovard.
Bob Gaskins, a senior who worked with Bob Lutz in revising the selection process for this year's awards, said three professors will probably be chosen from LAS and three from the professional schools.
A vote for Project FASTEN, the
four-year project headed by Dr. Sims Carter since 1964, has also been suggested by many students.
Gaskins said the final selections will be made by a committee including four students and four faculty, w’ho will count the ballots and w'eigh their significance.
The final selections sometimes deviate from the exact ballot count to allow the awards to spread more evenly among the smaller schools and departments.
All faculty are eligible to receive the awards, unless they have w’on in the past five years. Recent winners in LAS include Dr. Marvin Berry, associate professor of classics; Dr. Joseph Nyomarkay, associate professor of political science: Dr. Roxie Morris, professor of physical therapy; and Dr. Joseph Boskin, associate professor of history.
LAS professors who won five years ago and are thus eligible again for the first time this year are James Durbin, associate professor of Eng* lish; Dr. Fred Krinsky, professor of political science; and Dr. Richard Stone, professor of geology.